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Linux USB drivers
Michael Opdenacker
Free Electrons
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Purpose of this course
Learn how to implement
Linux drivers
for some of the most
complex USB devices!
Buy yours on http://www.thinkgeek.com/stuff/41/fundue.shtml!
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Rights to copy
Attribution – ShareAlike 2.5
© Copyright 20062007
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or with OpenOffice.org itself!
Take advantage of internal or external hyperlinks.
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Find pages quickly thanks to automatic search
Use thumbnails to navigate in the document in a quick way
If you’re reading a paper or HTML copy, you should get your
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Course prerequisites
Fondue cheese
Good knowledge about Linux device driver development.
Most notions which are not USB specific are covered
in our http://freeelectrons.com/training/drivers course.
To create real, working drivers: a good knowledge about the
USB devices you want to write drivers for. A good
knowledge about USB specifications too.
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Contents
Linux USB basics Writing USB drivers
Linux USB drivers Supported devices
USB devices Registering a USB driver
Userspace representation USB transfers without URBs
Linux USB communication
USB Request Blocks
Initializing and submitting URBs
Completion handlers
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Linux USB drivers
Linux USB basics
Linux USB drivers
Linux USB drivers
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USB drivers (1)
USB core drivers
Architecture independent kernel subsystem.
Implements the USB bus specification.
Outside the scope of this training.
USB host drivers
Different drivers for each USB control hardware.
Usually available in the Board Support Package.
Architecture and platform dependent.
Not covered yet by this training.
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USB drivers (2)
USB device drivers
Drivers for devices on the USB bus.
The main focus of this course!
Platform independent: when you use Linux on an embedded
platform, you can use any USB device supported by Linux
(cameras, keyboards, video capture, wifi dongles...).
USB device controller drivers
For Linux systems with just a USB device controller
(frequent in embedded systems).
Not covered yet by this course.
Linux USB drivers
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USB gadget drivers
Drivers for Linux systems with a USB device controller
Typical example: digital cameras.
You connect the device to a PC and see the camera
as a USB storage device.
USB device controller driver:
Platform dependent. Supports the chip connecting to the USB bus.
USB gadget drivers, platform independent. Examples:
Ethernet gadget: implements networking through USB
Storage gadget: makes the host see a USB storage device
Serial gadget: for terminaltype of communication.
See Documentation/DocBook/gadget/ in kernel sources.
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Linux USB support overview
User applications Users
System call interface
USB device drivers Kernel subsystems
Kernel subsystems
Other kernel subsystems
USB core
USB host controller driver
Linux Kernel
USB host controller Hardware
USB device
Linux USB drivers
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USB host controllers OHCI and UHCI
2 competing Host Control Device (HCD) interfaces
OHCI Open Host Controller Interface
Compaq's implementation adopted as a standard for USB 1.0 and 1.1
by the USB Implementers Forum (USBIF).
Also used for Firewire devices.
UHCI Universal Host Controller Interface.
Created by Intel, insisting that other implementers use it and pay
royalties for it. Only VIA licensed UHCI, and others stuck to OHCI.
This competition required to test devices for both host controller standards!
For USB 2.0, the USBIF insisted on having only one standard.
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USB host controllers EHCI
EHCI Extended Host Controller Interface.
For USB 2.0. The only one to support highspeed transfers.
Each EHCI controller contains four virtual HCD implementations to
support Full Speed and Low Speed devices.
On Intel and VIA chipsets, virtual HCDs are UHCI.
Other chipset makers have OHCI virtual HCDs.
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USB transfer speed
LowSpeed: up to 1.5 Mbps
Since USB 1.0
FullSpeed: up to 12 Mbps
Since USB 1.1
HiSpeed: up to 480 Mbps
Since USB 2.0
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Linux USB drivers
Linux USB basics
USB devices
Linux USB drivers
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USB descriptors
Operating system independent. Described in the USB specification
Device Represent the devices connected to the USB bus.
Example: USB speaker with volume control buttons.
Configurations Represent the state of the device.
Examples: Active, Standby, Initialization
Interfaces Logical devices.
Examples: speaker, volume control buttons.
Endpoints Unidirectional communication pipes.
Either IN (device to computer) or OUT (computer to device).
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Control endpoints
Used to configure the device, get information about it, send
commands to it, retrieve status information.
Simple, small data transfers.
Every device has a control endpoint (endpoint 0),
used to configure the device at insertion time.
The USB protocol guarantees that the corresponding data
transfers will always have enough (reserved) bandwidth.
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Interrupt endpoints
Transfer small amounts of data at a fixed rate
each time the hosts asks the device for data.
Guaranteed, reserved bandwidth.
For devices requiring guaranteed response time,
such as USB mice and keyboards.
Note: different than hardware interrupts.
Require constant polling from the host.
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Bulk endpoints
Large sporadic data transfers
using all remaining available bandwidth.
No guarantee on bandwidth or latency.
Guarantee that no data is lost.
Typically used for printers, storage or network devices.
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Isochronous endpoints
Also for large amounts of data.
Guaranteed speed
(often but not necessarily as fast as possible).
No guarantee that all data makes it through.
Used by realtime data transfers (typically audio and video).
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The usb_endpoint_descriptor structure (1)
The usb_endpoint_descriptor structure contains all the
USBspecific data announced by the device itself.
Here are useful fields for driver writers:
__u8 bEndpointAddress:
USB address of the endpoint.
It also includes the direction of the endpoint. You can use the
USB_ENDPOINT_DIR_MASK bitmask to tell whether this is a
USB_DIR_IN or USB_DIR_OUT endpoint. Example:
if ((endpoint>desc.bEndpointAddress &
USB_ENDPOINT_DIR_MASK) == USB_DIR_IN)
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The usb_endpoint_descriptor structure (2)
__u8 bmAttributes:
The type of the endpoint. You can use the USB_ENDPOINT_XFERTYPE_MASK
bitmask to tell whether the type is USB_ENDPOINT_XFER_ISOC,
USB_ENDPOINT_XFER_BULK, USB_ENDPOINT_XFER_INT or
USB_ENDPOINT_XFER_CONTROL.
__u8 wMaxPacketSize:
Maximum size in bytes that the endpoint can handle. Note that if greater sizes are used,
data will be split in wMaxPacketSize chunks.
__u8 bInterval:
For interrupt endpoints, device polling interval (in milliseconds).
Note that the above names do not follow Linux coding standards.
The Linux USB implementation kept the original name from the USB specification
(http://www.usb.org/developers/docs/).
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Interfaces
Each interface encapsulates a single highlevel function (USB logical
connection). Example (USB webcam): video stream, audio stream,
keyboard (control buttons).
One driver is needed for each interface!
Alternate settings: each USB interface may have different parameter
settings. Example: different bandwidth settings for an audio interface.
The initial state is in the first setting, (number 0).
Alternate settings are often used to control the use of periodic endpoints,
such as by having different endpoints use different amounts of reserved
USB bandwidth. All standardscompliant USB devices that use
isochronous endpoints will use them in nondefault settings.
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The usb_interface structure (1)
USB interfaces are represented by the usb_interface structure.
It is what the USB core passes to USB drivers.
struct usb_host_interface *altsetting;
List of alternate settings that may be selected for this interface, in
no particular order.
The usb_host_interface structure for each alternate setting
allows to access the usb_endpoint_descriptor structure
for each of its endpoints:
interface>alsetting[i]>endpoint[j]>desc
unsigned int num_altsetting;
The number of alternate settings.
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The usb_interface structure (2)
struct usb_host_interface *cur_altsetting;
The currently active alternate setting.
int minor;
Minor number this interface is bound to.
(for drivers using usb_register_dev(), described later).
Other fields in the structure shouldn't be needed by USB drivers.
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Configurations
Interfaces are bundled into configurations.
Configurations represent the state of the device.
Examples: Active, Standby, Initialization
Configurations are described
with the usb_host_config structure.
However, drivers do not need to access this structure.
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Devices
Devices are represented by the usb_device structure.
We will see later that several USB API functions need such a
structure.
Many drivers use the interface_to_usbdev()
function to access their usb_device structure from the
usb_interface structure they are given by the USB core.
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USB device overview
Interface Audio Interface Audio
Interface Video Interface Video
Configuration
Configuration Active Configuration
ConfigurationStandby
Device
USB webcam
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USB devices Summary
Linux USB drivers
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Linux USB drivers
Linux USB basics
Userspace representation
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usbview
http://usbview.sourceforge.net
Graphical display
of the contents of
/proc/bus/usb/devices.
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usbtree
http://www.linuxusb.org/usbtree
Also displays information from /proc/bus/usb/devices:
> usbtree
\/: Bus 04.Port 1: Dev 1, Class=root_hub, Driver=ehci_hcd/6p, 480M
/: Bus 03.Port 1: Dev 1, Class=root_hub, Driver=uhci_hcd/2p, 12M
/: Bus 02.Port 1: Dev 1, Class=root_hub, Driver=uhci_hcd/2p, 12M
|__ Port 1: Dev 7, If 0, Class=HID, Driver=usbhid, 1.5M
/: Bus 01.Port 1: Dev 1, Class=root_hub, Driver=uhci_hcd/2p, 12M
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Linux USB drivers
Linux USB communication
USB Request Blocks
Linux USB drivers
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USB Request Blocks
Any communication between the host and device is done
asynchronously using USB Request Blocks (urbs).
They are similar to packets in network communications.
Every endpoint can handle a queue of urbs.
Every urb has a completion handler.
A driver may allocate many urbs for a single endpoint, or
reuse the same urb for different endpoints.
See Documentation/usb/URB.txt in kernel sources.
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Urban life
Device The lifecycle of an urb
Creation
driver
USB core
Assigned (controller
to an endpoint
driver)
Submitted Transfered
yes to the USB core to the device
can be Notification at
reused? transfer completion
no
Deletion
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The urb structure (1)
Fields of the urb structure useful to USB device drivers:
struct usb_device *dev;
Device the urb is sent to.
unsigned int pipe;
Information about the endpoint in the target device.
int status;
Transfer status.
unsigned int transfer_flags;
Instructions for handling the urb.
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The urb structure (2)
void * transfer_buffer;
Buffer storing transferred data.
Must be created with kmalloc()!
dma_addr_t transfer_dma;
Data transfer buffer when DMA is used.
int transfer_buffer_length;
Transfer buffer length.
int actual_length;
Actual length of data received or sent by the urb.
usb_complete_t complete;
Completion handler called when the transfer is complete.
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The urb structure (3)
void *context;
Data blob which can be used in the completion handler.
unsigned char *setup_packet; (control urbs)
Setup packet transferred before the data in the transfer buffer.
dma_addr_t setup_dma; (control urbs)
Same, but when the setup packet is transferred with DMA.
int interval; (isochronous and interrupt urbs)
Urb polling interval.
int error_count; (isochronous urbs)
Number of isochronous transfers which reported an error.
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The urb structure (4)
int start_frame; (isochronous urbs)
Sets or returns the initial frame number to use.
int number_of_packets; (isochronous urbs)
Number of isochronous transfer buffers to use.
struct usb_iso_packet_descriptor (isochronous urbs)
iso_frame_desc[0];
Allows a single urb to define multiple isochronous transfers at once.
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Creating pipes
Functions used to initialize the pipe field of the urb structure:
Control pipes
usb_sndctrlpipe(), usb_rcvctrlpipe()
Bulk pipes
usb_sndbulkpipe(), usb_rcvbulkpipe()
Interrupt pipes
usb_sndintpipe(), usb_rcvintpipe()
Isochronous pipes
usb_sndisocpipe(), usb_rcvisocpipe()
Prototype
send (out) receive (in)
unsigned int usb_[snd/rcv][ctrl/bulk/int/isoc]pipe(
struct usb_device *dev, unsigned int endpoint);
Linux USB drivers
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Creating urbs
urb structures must always be allocated with the usb_alloc_urb()
function.
That's needed for reference counting used by the USB core.
#include <linux/usb.h>
struct urb *usb_alloc_urb(
int iso_packets, // Number of isochronous
// packets the urb should contain.
// 0 for other transfer types
gfp_t mem_flags); // Standard kmalloc() flags
Check that it didn't return NULL (allocation failed)!
Typical example:
urb = usb_alloc_urb(0, GFP_KERNEL);
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Freeing urbs
Similarly, you have to use a dedicated function to release urbs:
void usb_free_urb(struct urb *urb);
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USB Request Blocks Summary
Basic data structure used in any USB communication.
Implemented by the struct urb type.
Must be created with the usb_alloc_urb() function.
Shouldn't be allocated statically or with kmalloc().
Must be deleted with usb_free_urb().
Linux USB drivers
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Linux USB drivers
Linux USB communication
Initializing and submitting urbs
Linux USB drivers
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Initializing interrupt urbs
void usb_fill_int_urb (
struct urb *urb, // urb to be initialized
struct usb_device *dev, // device to send the urb to
unsigned int pipe, // pipe (endpoint and device specific)
void *transfer_buffer, // transfer buffer
int buffer_length, // transfer buffer size
usb_complete_t complete, // completion handler
void *context, // context (for handler)
int interval // Scheduling interval (see next page)
);
This doesn't prevent you from making more changes
to the urb fields before urb submission.
The transfer_flags field needs to be set by the driver.
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urb scheduling interval
For interrupt and isochronous transfers
LowSpeed and FullSpeed devices:
the interval unit is frames (ms)
HiSpeed devices:
the interval unit is microframes (1/8 ms)
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Initializing bulk urbs
Same parameters as in usb_fill_int_urb(),
except that there is no interval parameter.
void usb_fill_bulk_urb (
struct urb *urb, // urb to be initialized
struct usb_device *dev, // device to send the urb to
unsigned int pipe, // pipe (endpoint and device specific)
void *transfer_buffer, // transfer buffer
int buffer_length, // transfer buffer size
usb_complete_t complete, // completion handler
void *context, // context (for handler)
);
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Initializing control urbs
Same parameters as in usb_fill_bulk_urb(),
except that there is a setup_packet parameter.
void usb_fill_control_urb (
struct urb *urb, // urb to be initialized
struct usb_device *dev, // device to send the urb to
unsigned int pipe, // pipe (endpoint and device specific)
unsigned char *setup_packet, // setup packet data
void *transfer_buffer, // transfer buffer
int buffer_length, // transfer buffer size
usb_complete_t complete, // completion handler
void *context, // context (for handler)
);
Note that many drivers use the usb_control_msg() function instead
(explained later).
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Initializing isochronous urbs
No helper function. Has to be done manually by the driver.
for (i=0; i < USBVIDEO_NUMSBUF; i++) {
int j, k;
struct urb *urb = uvd>sbuf[i].urb;
urb>dev = dev;
urb>context = uvd;
urb>pipe = usb_rcvisocpipe(dev, uvd>video_endp);
urb>interval = 1;
urb>transfer_flags = URB_ISO_ASAP;
urb>transfer_buffer = uvd>sbuf[i].data;
urb>complete = usbvideo_IsocIrq;
urb>number_of_packets = FRAMES_PER_DESC;
urb>transfer_buffer_length = uvd>iso_packet_len * FRAMES_PER_DESC;
for (j=k=0; j < FRAMES_PER_DESC; j++, k += uvd>iso_packet_len) {
urb>iso_frame_desc[j].offset = k;
urb>iso_frame_desc[j].length = uvd>iso_packet_len;
}
}
drivers/media/video/usbvideo/usbvideo.c example
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Allocating DMA buffers (1)
You can use the usb_buffer_alloc() function
to allocate a DMA consistent buffer:
void *usb_buffer_alloc (
struct usb_device *dev, // device
size_t size, // buffer size
gfp_t mem_flags, // kmalloc() flags
dma_addr_t *dma // (output) DMA address
); // of the buffer.
Example:
buf = usb_buffer_alloc(dev>udev,
count, GFP_KERNEL, &urb>transfer_dma);
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Allocating DMA buffers (2)
To use these buffers, use the URB_NO_TRANSFER_DMA_MAP
or URB_NO_SETUP_DMA_MAP settings for urb>transfer_flags to indicate
that urb>transfer_dma or urb>setup_dma are valid on submit.
Examples:
urb>transfer_flags |= URB_NO_TRANSFER_DMA_MAP;
u>transfer_flags |= URB_NO_SETUP_DMA_MAP;
Freeing these buffers:
void usb_buffer_free (
struct usb_device *dev, // device
size_t size, // buffer size
void *addr, // CPU address of buffer
dma_addr_t dma // DMA address of buffer
);
Linux USB drivers
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Submitting urbs
After creating and initializing the urb
int usb_submit_urb(
struct urb *urb, // urb to submit
int mem_flags); // kmalloc() flags
mem_flags is used for internal allocations performed by
usb_submit_urb(). Settings that should be used:
GFP_ATOMIC: called from code which cannot sleep: a urb completion
handler, hard or soft interrupts. Or called when the caller holds a
spinlock.
GPF_NOIO: in some cases when block storage is used.
GFP_KERNEL: in other cases.
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usb_submit_urb return values
usb_submit_urb() immediately returns:
0: Request queued
ENOMEM: Out of memory
ENODEV: Unplugged device
EPIPE: Stalled endpoint
EAGAIN: Too many queued ISO transfers
EFBIG: Too many requested ISO frames
EINVAL: Invalid INT interval
More than one packet for INT
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Canceling urbs asynchronously
To cancel a submitted urb without waiting
int usb_unlink_urb(struct urb *urb);
Success: returns EINPROGRESS
Failure: any other return value. It can happen:
When the urb was never submitted
When the has already been unlinked
When the hardware is done with the urb,
even if the completion handler hasn't been called yet.
The corresponding completion handlers will still be run
and will see urb>status == ECONNRESET.
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Canceling urbs synchronously
To cancel an urb and wait for all completion handlers to complete
This guarantees that the urb is totally idle and can be reused.
void usb_kill_urb(struct urb *urb);
Typically used in a disconnect() callback or close() function.
Caution: this routine mustn't be called in situations
which can not sleep: in interrupt context,
in a completion handler, or when holding a spinlock.
See comments in drivers/usb/core/urb.c
in kernel sources for useful details.
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Initializing and submitting urbs Summary
urb structure fields can be initialized with helper functions
usb_fill_int_urb(), usb_fill_bulk_urb() ,
usb_fill_control_urb()
Isochronous urbs have to be initialized by hand.
The transfer_flags field must be initialized
manually by each driver.
Use the usb_submit_urb() function to queue urbs.
Submitted urbs can be canceled using usb_unlink_urb()
(asynchronous) or usb_kill_urb() (synchronous).
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Linux USB drivers
Linux USB communication
Completion handlers
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When is the completion handler called?
The completion handler is called in interrupt context, in only 3 situations.
Check the error value in urb>status.
After the data transfer successfully completed.
urb>status == 0
Error(s) happened during the transfer.
The urb was unlinked by the USB core.
urb>status should only be checked from the completion handler!
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Transfer status (1)
Described in Documentation/usb/errorcodes.txt
The urb is no longer “linked” in the system
ECONNRESET
The urb was unlinked by usb_unlink_urb().
ENOENT
The urb was stopped by usb_kill_urb().
ESHUTDOWN
Error in from the host controller driver. The device was disconnected from the
system, the controller was disabled, or the configuration was changed while the
urb was sent.
ENODEV
Device removed. Often preceded by a burst of other errors, since the hub
driver doesn't detect device removal events immediately.
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Transfer status (2)
Typical hardware problems with the cable or the device
(including its firmware)
EPROTO
Bitstuff error, no response packet received in time by the hardware,
or unknown USB error.
EILSEQ
CRC error, no response packet received in time, or unknown USB error.
EOVERFLOW
The amount of data returned by the endpoint was greater than either the
max packet size of the endpoint or the remaining buffer size. "Babble".
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Transfer status (3)
Other error status values
EINPROGRESS
Urb not completed yet. Your driver should never get this value.
ETIMEDOUT
Usually reported by synchronous USB message functions
when the specified timeout was exceed.
EPIPE
Endpoint stalled. For noncontrol endpoints,
reset this status with usb_clear_halt().
ECOMM
During an IN transfer, the host controller received data from an endpoint faster
than it could be written to system memory.
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Transfer status (4)
ENOSR
During an OUT transfer, the host controller could not retrieve data from
system memory fast enough to keep up with the USB data rate.
EREMOTEIO
The data read from the endpoint did not fill the specified buffer, and
URB_SHORT_NOT_OK was set in urb>transfer_flags.
EXDEV
Isochronous transfer only partially completed.
Look at individual frame status for details.
EINVAL
Typically happens with an incorrect urb structure field
or usb_submit_urb() function parameter.
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Completion handler implementation
Prototype:
void (*usb_complete_t)(
struct urb *, // The completed urb
struct pt_regs * // Register values at the time
// of the corresponding interrupt (if any)
);
Remember you are in interrupt context:
Do not execute call which may sleep (use GFP_ATOMIC, etc.).
Complete as quickly as possible.
Schedule remaining work in a tasklet if needed.
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Completion handler Summary
The completion handler is called in interrupt context.
Don't run any code which could sleep!
Check the urb>status value in this handler,
and not before.
Success: urb>status == 0
Otherwise, error status described in
Documentation/usb/errorcodes.txt.
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Linux USB drivers
Writing USB drivers
Supported devices
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What devices does the driver support?
Or what driver supports a given device?
Information needed by userspace, to find the right driver to
load or remove after a USB hotplug event.
Information needed by the driver, to call the right probe()
and disconnect() driver functions (see later).
Such information is declared in a usb_device_id structure
by the driver init() function.
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The usb_device_id structure (1)
Defined according to USB specifications and described in
include/linux/mod_devicetable.h.
__u16 match_flags
Bitmask defining which fields in the structure are to be matched
against. Usually set with helper functions described later.
__u16 idVendor, idProduct
USB vendor and product id, assigned by the USBIF.
__u16 bcdDevice_lo, bcdDevice_hi
Product version range supported by the driver,
expressed in binarycoded decimal (BCD) form.
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The usb_device_id structure (2)
__u8 bDeviceClass, bDeviceSubClass, bDeviceProtocol
Class, subclass and protocol of the device.
Numbers assigned by the USBIF.
Products may choose to implement classes, or be vendorspecific. Device
classes specify the behavior of all the interfaces on a device.
__u8 bInterfaceClass, bInterfaceSubclass,
bInterfaceProtocol
Class, subclass and protocol of the individual interface.
Numbers assigned by the USBIF.
Interface classes only specify the behavior of a given interface.
Other interfaces may support other classes.
kernel_ulong_t driver_info
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The usb_device_id structure (3)
kernel_ulong_t driver_info
Holds information used by the driver. Usually it holds a pointer to a
descriptor understood by the driver, or perhaps device flags.
This field is useful to differentiate different devices
from each other in the probe() function.
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Declaring supported devices (1)
USB_DEVICE(vendor, product)
Creates a usb_device_id structure which can be used to
match only the specified vendor and product ids.
Used by most drivers for nonstandard devices.
USB_DEVICE_VER(vendor, product, lo, hi)
Similar, but only for a given version range.
Only used 11 times throughout Linux 2.6.18!
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Declaring supported devices (2)
USB_DEVICE_INFO (class, subclass, protocol)
Matches a specific class of USB devices.
USB_INTERFACE_INFO (class, subclass, protocol)
Matches a specific class of USB interfaces.
The above 2 macros are only used in the implementations of standard
device and interface classes.
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Declaring supported devices (3)
Created usb_device_id structures are declared
with the MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE() macro as in the below example:
/* Example from drivers/usb/net/catc.c */
static struct usb_device_id catc_id_table [] = {
{ USB_DEVICE(0x0423, 0xa) }, /* CATC Netmate, Belkin F5U011 */
{ USB_DEVICE(0x0423, 0xc) }, /* CATC Netmate II, Belkin F5U111 */
{ USB_DEVICE(0x08d1, 0x1) }, /* smartBridges smartNIC */
{ } /* Terminating entry */
};
MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(usb, catc_id_table);
Note that MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE() is also used
with other subsystems: pci, pcmcia, serio, isapnp, input...
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Supported devices Summary
Drivers need to announce the devices they support
in usb_device_id structures.
Needed for user space to know which module to (un)load,
and for the kernel which driver code to execute, when a
device is inserted or removed.
Most drivers use USB_DEVICE() to create the structures.
These structures are then registered
with MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE(usb, xxx).
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Linux USB drivers
Writing USB drivers
Registering a USB driver
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The usb_driver structure
USB drivers must define a usb_driver structure:
const char *name
Unique driver name. Usually be set to the module name.
const struct usb_device_id *id_table;
The table already declared with MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE().
int (*probe) (struct usb_interface *intf,
const struct usb_device_id *id);
Probe callback (detailed later).
void (*disconnect) (struct usb_interface *intf);
Disconnect callback (detailed later).
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Optional usb_driver structure fields
int (*suspend) (struct usb_interface *intf,
pm_message_t message);
int (*resume) (struct usb_interface *intf);
Power management: callbacks called before and after the USB core
suspends and resumes the device.
void (*pre_reset) (struct usb_interface *intf);
void (*post_reset) (struct usb_interface *intf);
Called by usb_reset_composite_device()
before and after it performs a USB port reset.
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Driver registration
Use usb_register() to register your driver. Example:
/* Example from drivers/usb/input/mtouchusb.c */
static struct usb_driver mtouchusb_driver = {
.name = "mtouchusb",
.probe = mtouchusb_probe,
.disconnect = mtouchusb_disconnect,
.id_table = mtouchusb_devices,
};
static int __init mtouchusb_init(void)
{
dbg("%s called", __FUNCTION__);
return usb_register(&mtouchusb_driver);
}
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Driver unregistration
Use usb_deregister() to register your driver. Example:
/* Example from drivers/usb/input/mtouchusb.c */
static void __exit mtouchusb_cleanup(void)
{
dbg("%s called", __FUNCTION__);
usb_deregister(&mtouchusb_driver);
}
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probe() and disconnect() functions
The probe() function is called by the USB core to see if the
driver is willing to manage a particular interface on a device.
The driver should then make checks on the information passed to
it about the device.
If it decides to manage the interface, the probe() function will
return 0. Otherwise, it will return a negative value.
The disconnect() function is called by the USB core when a
driver should no longer control the device (even if the driver is
still loaded), and should do some cleanup.
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Context: USB hub kernel thread
The probe() and disconnect() callbacks are called in
the context of the USB hub kernel thread.
So, it is legal to call functions which may sleep in these
functions.
However, all addition and removal of devices is managed by
this single thread.
Most of the probe function work should indeed be done when
the device is actually opened by a user. This way, this doesn't
impact the performance of the kernel thread in managing
other devices.
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probe() function work
In this function the driver should initialize local structures which it
may need to manage the device.
In particular, it can take advantage of information it is given about
the device.
For example, drivers usually need to detect endpoint addresses and
buffer sizes.
Time to show and explain examples in detail!
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usb_set_intfdata() / usb_get_intfdata()
static inline void usb_set_intfdata (
struct usb_interface *intf,
void *data);
Function used in probe() functions to attach collected device data to an
interface. Any pointer will do!
Useful to store information for each device supported by a driver, without
having to keep a static data array.
The usb_get_intfdata() function is typically used in the device open
functions to retrieve the data.
Stored data need to be freed in disconnect() functions:
usb_set_intfdata(interface, NULL);
Plenty of examples are available in the kernel sources.
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Linux USB drivers
Writing USB drivers
USB transfers without URBs
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Transfers without URBs
The kernel provides two usb_bulk_msg()
and usb_control_msg() helper functions that make it possible to
transfer simple bulk and control messages, without having to:
Create or reuse an urb structure,
Initialize it,
Submit it,
And wait for its completion handler.
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Transfers without URBs constraints
These functions are synchronous and will make your code
sleep. You must not call them from interrupt context or with
a spinlock held.
You cannot cancel your requests, as you have no handle on
the URB used internally. Make sure your disconnect()
function can wait for these functions to complete.
See the kernel sources for examples using these functions!
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USB device drivers Summary
Module loading Devices are opened
Declare supported devices (interfaces). This calls data access functions registered
by the driver.
Bind them to probe() and
disconnect() functions. URBs are initialized.
Supported devices are found Once the transfers are over, completion
functions are called.
probe() functions for matching Data are copied from/to userspace.
interface drivers are called.
Devices are removed
They record interface information and
register resources or services. The disconnect() functions
are called.
The drivers may be unloaded.
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Advice for embedded system developers
If you need to develop a USB device driver for an embedded
Linux system.
Develop your driver on your GNU/Linux development host!
The driver will run with no change on the target Linux
system (provided you wrote portable code!): all USB device
drivers are platform independent.
Your driver will be much easier to develop on the host,
because of its flexibility and the availability of debugging
and development tools.
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References
Wikipedia's article on USB
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Serial_Bus
The USB drivers chapter in the Linux Device Drivers book:
http://lwn.net/Kernel/LDD3/ (Free License!)
The Linux kernel sources (hundreds of examples, “Use the Source!”)
Browse them with http://lxr.freeelectrons.com.
Linux USB project
http://www.linuxusb.org/
Linux kernel documentation:
Documentation/usb/
Linux USB API (generated from kernel sources):
http://freeelectrons.com/kerneldoc/latest/DocBook/usb/
USB specifications:
http://www.usb.org/developers/docs/
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Linux USB drivers
Annex
Ethernet over USB
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Ethernet over USB (1)
If your device doesn't have Ethernet connectivity,
but has a USB device controller
You can use Ethernet over USB through the g_ether USB
device (“gadget”) driver (CONFIG_USB_GADGET)
Of course, you need a working USB device driver. Generally
available as more and more embedded processors (well
supported by Linux) have a builtin USB device controller
Plugin both ends of the USB cable
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Ethernet over USB (2)
On the host, you need to have the usbnet module
(CONFIG_USB_USBNET)
Plugin both ends of the USB cable. Configure both ends as
regular networking devices. Example:
On the target device
modprobe g_ether
ifconfig usb0 192.168.0.202
route add 192.168.0.200 dev usb0
On the host
modprobe usbnet
ifconfig usb0 192.168.0.200
route add 192.168.0.202 dev usb0
Works great on iPAQ PDAs!
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Thanks
To the OpenOffice.org project, for their
presentation and word processor tools which To people who helped,
satisfied all my needs sent corrections or
suggestions:
To http://openclipart.org project contributors for
their nice public domain clipart. Manish Katiyar
To the members of the whole Free Software and
Open Source community, for sharing the best of
themselves: their work, their knowledge, their
friendship.
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